Amazon Prime will shut down its clothing try-on program
Amazon will be winding down its Prime Try Before You Buy program, which let Prime members try on clothes before paying for them, reports The Information. It will shutter on January 31st, according to a banner at the top of the service’s landing page.
Amazon spokesperson Maxine Tagay said in a statement emailed to The Verge that the company is discontinuing the service because it only worked for a “limited number of items” and customers have been “increasingly using our new AI-powered features” to decide what to buy.
Tagay gave examples like Virtual Try-On AR feature that puts 3D renders of shoes from certain brands on your feet using your smartphone’s camera. She also mentioned the company’s LLM-powered “personalized size recommendations” that tweak size recommendations based on customer reviews.
Prime Try Before You Buy launched in 2018 for all Prime subscribers as Amazon Wardrobe before the company later changed its name. Through it, Prime members can order up to six items, try them for seven days, then pay for what works and send back the rest — like a very basic version of Stitch Fix’s curated clothing service. But a big part of that is returns, which is something the…
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Summary
Amazon Prime will be discontinuing its Prime Try Before You Buy program, where Prime members could try on clothes before purchasing them. The program will shut down on January 31st. Amazon spokesperson Maxine Tagay explained that the service is being discontinued because it only worked for a limited number of items, and customers are increasingly using new AI-powered features for decision-making. Examples of these features include Virtual Try-On AR for shoes and personalized size recommendations based on customer reviews. The program, originally launched in 2018 as Amazon Wardrobe, allowed Prime members to order up to six items, try them for seven days, and only pay for what they wanted to keep.
This article was summarized using ChatGPT